Middle English or
Anglo-Norman
Period (1100-1500)
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The
Norman (France) defeated the Anglo-Saxons King in 1066 and conquered England.
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The
Norman Conquest inaugurated a new epoch in the literary and politic history of
England.
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The
Anglo-Saxon authors were displaced and the foreign types of literature was
introduced.
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The
Anglo-Saxon lost their hostility to the new comers and became part and parcel
of one nation.
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The Normans brought
with them soldiers, artisans and traders.
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English language was
thrown in the background and Latin and French languages were used.
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The conquest of
Anglo-Norman led to the invigoration of the monasteries.
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Clergy and Church were
powerful in this period.
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It was a period of
theo-centricism, related to God, church and Christ.
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People
were confined to religion and religious knowledge.
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Worldly
or secular knowledge was not acquired.
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The Romance was the most popular
form of literature.
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Most
of these Romances were borrowed from Latin and French sources.
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The
stories of King Arthur, the war of troy, and of Alexander the Great.
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Miracle plays also became very
popular, they were based on Biblical stories, about the creation of man, his
fall and banishment from Eden, the life of Christ and the day of judgement.
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Morality plays also flourished
during the Middle age.
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These
plays have uniform theme of the struggle between good, and ‘evil’, with the
intent to teach right living and uphold religion.
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The
parsonages were abstract virtues or vices, e.g., truth, honour, courtesy,
loyalty, and evil abstract characters, e.g., pride, lust, greed, e.t.c, it was
the start of allegory.
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William
Lang land, John Gower and Jeoffery Chaucer were the prominent poets of this
period.
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